Bassman
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 372
- Location
- New Jersey USA
I didn't hear from ol' Fidel today (gonna check this out though), but that would be up to our government...not Raul. Si?
That's half the problem today, too much is up to the Govt......Bassman said:I didn't hear from ol' Fidel today (gonna check this out though), but that would be up to our government...not Raul. Si?
indycop said:I fear when the embargo ends if ever , the US govt. will tax them into oblivian
indycop said:Are the cubans that much better? With the growers that left Cuba and are doing well, Would it be safe to say that they are just as good or almost, or is there just no comparison?
Ahh, I have only had one cigar that was claimed to be a cuban. It was not kept in a humidor possibly ever and sucked, but I try to not judge off of that one . :eusa_doh:jamespowers said:They really aren't that much better when you consider the price and the fact that some cigars from other places are just as good.
indycop said:Ahh, I have only had one cigar that was claimed to be a cuban. It was not kept in a humidor possibly ever and sucked, but I try to not judge off of that one . :eusa_doh:
Very true, and some of my favorites were not rated all that high also. I do need to try this Oliva series V I have that was supposedly rated 94...jamespowers said:I wouldn't judge based on that one but you can easily see in the pages of Cigar Afficianado and Insider how cigars are rated. Cubans come in pretty high but some from Dominican Republic and other places are up there as well.
RedPop4 said:I think there will be a mini-boom in cigars when the Cuban embargo is gone. Imperial Tobacco of the UK just bought out Altadis. Altadis had bought a 49.9% share of Habanos S. A. a few years ago. Altadis owns some of the brands available here in another form, that came from Cuba: Montecristo, H. Upmann, Saint Luis Rey, Trinidad, and Por Larranaga to name some. General Cigar, part of Swedish Match, own quite a few of the rest: Partagas, Punch, Hoyo de Monterrey, Ramon Allones, Sancho Panza, El Rey del Mundo, Cohiba.
These companies won't wait very long to solve this. Remember too, that while Habanos S. A. still owns more than 50%, Altadis/Imperial have made changes in production, aging, consistency and quality control. They're ready. It won't be all that bad. Demand will increase, many Americans who aren't seasoned cigar smokers will make it difficult to get, like many "amatuers" (see people who only dine out on Valentine's Day) they'll try them at this point, and quality may not be up to par. They'll say "what's the big deal?" and it'll shake out within the year. Once these types of smokers are out of the market, Imperial and Habanos S. A. will again catch up and that'll be that.
RedPop4 said:They've had 46 years to think about this, James. I believe they're ready for it.
Imperial is huge, most likely they'll have enough to pay the families to keep them out of court and keep business humming right along. There may likely be one or two families acting "on principle" which is their right, and which would be correct.
I think the expatriates already sold their family names, that's why Consolidated, General, etc. already use them. They couldn't just "use" them, the families already sold that. General and Altadis have already settled the upcoming battle over the Cohiba, and Trinidad names as well. The only one left to be a sticking point might be the San Cristobal name, which first appeared from Habanos S. A. in 1997, and Ashton debuted their name this past August at the RTDA show.